Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion

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Introduction

The Concept of God


Most philosophy of religion in the West has focused on different versions of theism.
Ancient philosophy of religion wrestled with the credibility of monotheism and poly-
theism in opposition to skepticism and very primitive naturalistic schemes. For exam-
ple, Plato argued that the view that God is singularly good should be preferred to the
portrait of the gods that was articulated in Greek poetic tradition, according to which
there are many gods, often imperfect and subject to vice and ignorance. The emergence
and development of the Abrahamic faiths (Judaism, Christianity and Islam) on a global
scale secured the centrality of theism for philosophical inquiry, but the relevance of a
philosophical exploration of theism is not limited to those interested in these religions
and the cultures in which they flourish. While theism has generally flourished in
religious traditions amid religious practices, one may be a theist without adopting
any religion whatever, and one may find theistic elements (however piecemeal) in Con-
fucianism, Hinduism, some versions of Mahayana Buddhism, and other traditions.
The debate over theism also has currency for secular humanism and religious forms
of atheism as in Theravada Buddhist philosophy.
Traditionally, theists have maintained that God is maximally excellent, necessarily
existent, incorporeal, omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent, eternal or everlasting, and
essentially good. Theists have differed over whether they regard God as impassable
(not subject to passion) or passable. There is not space to address these issues in detail
here; however, the nature of these divine attributes and their relationship to one
another have been the subject of much reflection within philosophy of religion.
Two concerns arise when articulating the concept of God and the divine attributes.
First, some argue that there is a tension between the God of philosophy and the God
of revelation. If scripture definitively portrays God as loving and just, then scriptural
narratives in which God appears neither loving nor just must either be interpreted as
reflecting a projection of fallible human lovelessness and injustice, or theologians
need to show how the God of revelation is nevertheless consistently loving and just.
Those adopting the first approach invoke the concept of progressive revelation, whereby
God has been increasingly revealed over time. Precepts in Hebrew scripture that allow
slavery, for example, are judged to be primitive, merely-human projections that even-
tually give way to the purity and nobility of ethical monotheism as evidenced in
prophets such as Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Amos. Other philosophers respond by using
the biblical understanding of God to shape the philosophy of God. Thus, while some
traditional theists have believed God to be eternal, changeless, and impassable, other
philosophers use biblical texts to defend the idea that God is in time, subject to change
and God has passions (e.g., love of the good). Again, some traditionalists have held that

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